4.5 Article

Advances in Understanding Environmental Risks of Red Mud After the Ajka Spill, Hungary

Journal

JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE METALLURGY
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages 332-343

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40831-016-0050-z

Keywords

Bauxite processing residue; Bauxite residue; Environmental risk; Resource recovery; Red mud

Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) [NE/I019468/1, NE/ K015648/1]
  2. Campus Hungary Scholarship by Balassi Institute [CHP/128-85/2013]
  3. New Hungary Development Plan [TAMOP-4.2.1/B-09/1/KMR-2010-0002]
  4. Hungarian State, European Union, European Social Fund [TAMOP4.2.4.A-1-11-1-2012-0001]
  5. Hungarian OTKA Fund [PD 115871]
  6. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/L014211/1, NE/K015648/1, NE/I019468/1, NE/L01405X/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. NERC [NE/L01405X/1, NE/L014211/1, NE/I019468/1, NE/K015648/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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In the 5 years since the 2010 Ajka red mud spill (Hungary), there have been 46 scientific studies assessing the key risks and impacts associated with the largest single release of bauxite-processing residue (red mud) to the environment. These studies have provided insight into the main environmental concerns, as well as the effectiveness of remedial efforts that can inform future management of red mud elsewhere. The key immediate risks after the spill were associated with the highly caustic nature of the red mud slurry and fine particle size, which once desiccated, could generate fugitive dust. Studies on affected populations showed no major hazards identified beyond caustic exposure, while red mud dust risks were considered equal to or lesser than those provided by urban dusts of similar particle size distribution. The longer-term environmental risks were related to the saline nature of the spill material (salinization of inundated soils) and the release and the potential cycling of oxyanion-forming metals and metalloids (e.g., Al, As, Cr, Mo, and V) in the soil-water environment. Of these, those that are soluble at high pH, inefficiently removed from solution during dilution and likely to be exchangeable at ambient pH are of chief concern (e.g., Mo and V). Various ecotoxicological studies have identified negative impacts of red mud-amended soils and sediments at high volumes (typically > 5 %) on different test organisms, with some evidence of molecular-level impacts at high dose (e.g., genotoxic effects on plants and mice). These data provide a valuable database to inform future toxicological studies for red mud. However, extensive management efforts in the aftermath of the spill greatly limited these exposure risks through leachate neutralization and red mud recovery from the affected land. Monitoring of affected soils, stream sediments, waters and aquatic biota (fungi, invertebrates and fish) have all shown a very rapid recovery toward prespill conditions. The accident also prompted research that has also highlighted potential benefits of red mud use for critical raw material recovery (e.g., Ga, Co, V, rare earths, inform), carbon sequestration, biofuel crop production, and use as a soil ameliorant.

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